Akshay Venkatesh was born on 21 November 1981 is an Indian-conceived Australian mathematician. His exploration advantages are in the fields of including, equidistribution issues automorphic structures and number hypothesis, specifically portrayal hypothesis, locally symmetric spaces and ergodic hypothesis.
He is the main Australian to have won awards at both the International Physics Olympiad and International Mathematics Olympiad, which he did at 12 years old.
Venkatesh was conceived in Delhi, India to a white collar class Hindu Tamil Brahmin family, who moved to Perth in Western Australia at age 2.He went to Scotch College. His mom, Svetha, is a software engineering educator at Deakin University. Venkatesh went to extracurricular instructional courses for skilled understudies in the state scientific olympiad program, and in 1993, while matured just 11, he contended at the 24th International Physics Olympiad in Williamsburg, Virginia, winning a bronze award. The next year, he changed his thoughtfulness regarding science and, in the wake of setting second in the Australian Mathematical Olympiad, he won a silver award in the sixth Asian Pacific Mathematics Olympiad,before winning a bronze decoration at the 1994 International Mathematics Olympiad held in Hong Kong. He finished his optional training that year, turning 13 preceding entering the University of Western Australia as its most youthful ever understudy. Venkatesh finished the multi year course in three years and progressed toward becoming, at 16, the most youthful individual to procure of First Class Honors in unadulterated science from the University.He was granted the J. A. Woods Memorial Prize as the most exceptional graduand of the year from the Faculties of Science, Engineering, Dentistry, or Medical Science.
Venkatesh initiated his PhD at Princeton University in 1998 under Peter Sarnak, which he finished in 2002, delivering the postulation Limiting types of the follow equation. He was upheld by the Hackett Fellowship for postgraduate investigation. He was then granted a postdoctoral position at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he filled in as a C.L.E. Moore teacher. Venkatesh at that point held a Clay Research Fellowship from the Clay Mathematics Institute from 2004 to 2006, and was a partner educator at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University. He was an individual from the School of Mathematics at Princeton's Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) from 2005 to 2006. He turned into a full educator at Stanford University on 1 September 2008, and was made a Distinguished Visiting Professor at the IAS in September 2017.He comes back to the IAS full time in mid-August 2018.
In 2018, he was awarded the Fields Medal for his synthesis of analytic number theory, homogeneous dynamics, topology, and representation theory.
Venkatesh has made commitments to a wide assortment of territories in science, including number hypothesis, automorphic frames, portrayal hypothesis, locally symmetric spaces and ergodic hypothesis, without anyone else's input, and as a team with a few mathematicians.
He is the main Australian to have won awards at both the International Physics Olympiad and International Mathematics Olympiad, which he did at 12 years old.
Venkatesh was conceived in Delhi, India to a white collar class Hindu Tamil Brahmin family, who moved to Perth in Western Australia at age 2.He went to Scotch College. His mom, Svetha, is a software engineering educator at Deakin University. Venkatesh went to extracurricular instructional courses for skilled understudies in the state scientific olympiad program, and in 1993, while matured just 11, he contended at the 24th International Physics Olympiad in Williamsburg, Virginia, winning a bronze award. The next year, he changed his thoughtfulness regarding science and, in the wake of setting second in the Australian Mathematical Olympiad, he won a silver award in the sixth Asian Pacific Mathematics Olympiad,before winning a bronze decoration at the 1994 International Mathematics Olympiad held in Hong Kong. He finished his optional training that year, turning 13 preceding entering the University of Western Australia as its most youthful ever understudy. Venkatesh finished the multi year course in three years and progressed toward becoming, at 16, the most youthful individual to procure of First Class Honors in unadulterated science from the University.He was granted the J. A. Woods Memorial Prize as the most exceptional graduand of the year from the Faculties of Science, Engineering, Dentistry, or Medical Science.
Venkatesh initiated his PhD at Princeton University in 1998 under Peter Sarnak, which he finished in 2002, delivering the postulation Limiting types of the follow equation. He was upheld by the Hackett Fellowship for postgraduate investigation. He was then granted a postdoctoral position at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he filled in as a C.L.E. Moore teacher. Venkatesh at that point held a Clay Research Fellowship from the Clay Mathematics Institute from 2004 to 2006, and was a partner educator at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University. He was an individual from the School of Mathematics at Princeton's Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) from 2005 to 2006. He turned into a full educator at Stanford University on 1 September 2008, and was made a Distinguished Visiting Professor at the IAS in September 2017.He comes back to the IAS full time in mid-August 2018.
In 2018, he was awarded the Fields Medal for his synthesis of analytic number theory, homogeneous dynamics, topology, and representation theory.
Venkatesh has made commitments to a wide assortment of territories in science, including number hypothesis, automorphic frames, portrayal hypothesis, locally symmetric spaces and ergodic hypothesis, without anyone else's input, and as a team with a few mathematicians.
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